Labour's McGuinness retains Northumbria PCC rolepublished at 19:14 British Summer Time 7 May 2021
Kim McGuiness talks of "a lot of work to do" as she keeps her Police and Crime Commissioner job.
Read MoreKim McGuiness talks of "a lot of work to do" as she keeps her Police and Crime Commissioner job.
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Read MoreThe Conservative Party will "work to repay voters' faith in them" after the victory at Hartlepool, its co-chairman has promised.
Amanda Milling described Jill Mortimer as a "fantastic MP", who would "work tirelessly for the people of Hartlepool".
She added: “We’re delighted that the people of Hartlepool have put their faith in Jill and the Conservatives to deliver on their priorities: to bring the change, investment and jobs Hartlepool deserves.
“The work to repay that faith starts right now, as we continue with our agenda to level up and build back better from the pandemic."
Senior Conservatives have congratulated Ben Houchen on his landslide victory in the Tees Valley mayoral contest.
Party co-chairman Amanda Milling and Chancellor Rishi Sunak were among those who highlighted Mr Houchen's re-election.
Tom Tugendhat, chairman of the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee, said: "Few have done more to transform a community. Teesside is a very different place.
"Leadership matters. We need more elected mayors delivering for our communities."
Ben Houchen won 73% of the vote ahead of Labour's Jessie Joe Jacobs, the only other candidate.
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Tom Wilkinson
Boris Johnson came face to face with a 30ft (9m) inflatable version of himself in Hartlepool after his party won an historic by-election.
The prime minister commented that the £2,000 replica reminded him of Superintendent Ted Hastings from BBC One's Line Of Duty.
Members of Hartlepool's business community caused a stir when they erected the inflatable outside the town's by-election count at 04:00.
It was later moved to the marina, where the prime minister was meeting the town's new MP, Jill Mortimer.
The group behind the blow-up Boris, known as the Hartlepool Wombles, denied it was a partisan stunt.
One of the group, who asked not to be named, said: "We are doing this to mark a historic change in Hartlepool.
"I'm not particularly political, in fact I didn't even vote."
Second preference votes are being counted in the Northumbria Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC) election after no candidate got more than 50% in first preferences.
In the first round, Labour's Kim McGuinness was more than 60,000 votes head - securing 179,021 (47%) votes ahead of Conservative Duncan Crute's 118,543 (31%), independent Julian Kilburn's 45,567 (12%) and Lib Dem Peter Maughan's 40,955 (10%).
A declaration was expected between 15:00-16:00 but it's now expected to be later.
Turnout for the vote is 36.9%
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Hartlepool's newly elect MP Conservative Jill Mortimer has told the BBC that people in the town "knew they'd been taken for granted for 57 years and they wanted positive change". She is the first Conservative to win in the town since 1959.
She also cited Brexit, the vaccine roll-out and the record of Tees Valley Mayor Ben Houchen in bringing investment into the area as other important factors in her victory.
She said that locals "will start to see the difference" in the town.
Boris Johnson says the by-election result is a "mandate" for his party to "continue to deliver" across the UK.
Read MoreBoris Johnson has arrived in Hartlepool to meet his balloon double after the Conservatives secured victory in the town's by-election.
The Prime Minister said the win for Jill Mortimer was a signal for the party to carry on delivering its policies to "build back better" after the pandemic.
He told reporters: "It's a mandate for us to continue to deliver, not just for the people of Hartlepool and the fantastic people of the North East, but for the whole of the country.
"If there is a lesson out of this whole election campaign across the whole of the UK is that the public want us to get on with focusing on their needs and their priorities, coming through the pandemic and making sure we build back better."
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Former councillor Steve Turner wins with nearly double the number of votes of his nearest rival.
Read MoreThe Conservatives gain the council after two winners were decided by picking lots out of a box.
Read MoreVotes are being counted for the Northumbria police and crime commissioner (PCC) role.
Counting started about an hour ago and a declaration is expected this afternoon between 15:00 and 16:00.
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Results are still being counted for other council elections, as well as for two mayors and four police and crime commissioners, and it may not be until Monday before they are all announced.
Ones due today are the Cleveland and Northumbria PCCs, and the Tees Valley Mayor.
North Tyneside Council could be today or Saturday.
On Saturday there will be the Durham PCC, North Tyneside Mayor, and Durham County Council along with Hartlepool Council.
All eyes are likely to be on the latter in the light of the Tories winning the parliamentary seat.
The council's 36 seats are up for grabs, and currently with no overall control, it is led by a coalition involving Conservatives, all manner of independents and other groups.
Cumbria PCC results are then due to be announced on Monday.
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Read MoreLord Peter Mandelson, the former Labour MP for Hartlepool, has told BBC Radio 4's Today programme he feels "fairly gutted" at the result in Hartlepool and also "a mild fury".
The Conservatives beat Labour, with a Tory MP - Jill Mortimer - elected for the first time in the current constituency's history
He said: "I feel fairly gutted by this result that will obviously certainly please Boris Johnson.
"I feel sad, disappointment above all, for the excellent campaign workers and party staff and volunteers and our excellent candidate, Paul Williams, who fought such a strong campaign."
He added: "I also feel, I have to say, a mild fury, that the last 10 years of what we have been doing in the Labour Party nationally and locally has brought us to this result, because that is above all fundamentally an explanation of what's happened today."
He said he had been knocking on doors in Hartlepool during the campaign and said he knew the reasons for Labour's defeat - "If I really had to boil them down to two things I would say they were two Cs - Covid and Corbyn.
"With a bit of Brexit, previous Brexit Party voters backing the man, Boris Johnson, who delivered them Brexit, and also promises of a large dollop of Tory Government money thrown in for good measure.
"All this as a whole turned out to be too heady a cocktail for Labour's campaign to take on."
The Tories win five vacant seats on the council and defend three seats in Redcar.
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Read MoreHartlepool's new Conservative MP has been congratulated by the two other female North East MPs.
Jill Mortimer is the first Conservative to gain the seat since the constituency was created in its current form in 1974.
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Congratulations have been flooding in to Jill Mortimer after she won the Hartlepool seat.
It is the first time a Conservative has gained the seat since the constituency was created in its current form in 1974, and the first woman MP to represent the town.
Defence Secretary Ben Wallace tweeted congratulations, and said "fashionable left elites" were paying the price.
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